Strengths: Caldwell-Pope is a versatile scorer who excels at creating his own shot. The pull-up jumper was his most devastating weapon last season, but he also excelled off screens and in spot-up situations. Defensively, he's a plus-rebounder for the position and a willing perimeter defender who often guarded the best opposing player.

Weaknesses: The Georgia guard has never met a shot he didn't like. While he can make many of those tough shots in traffic, he needs to refine his decision-making to become an efficient threat in the NBA. Ball-handling and playmaking are two other areas in which Caldwell-Pope needs to improve.

What Scouts Say: "He takes tough shots, but he makes a lot of them. He can score in a multitude of ways. He scores really high in our analytical projections. His weight is a concern because he'll have to defend some of the stronger two guards, but that's about it. He's a great kid, not overwhelmed by the process."

Team Fit: A really nice fit for a team that was characteristically starved for perimeter shooting last season. The Pistons may not have ball-handlers reliable enough to keep Caldwell-Pope's shoot-first game in line, but he'll immediately help space the floor for a frontline that features both Greg Monroe and Andre Drummond. Caldwell-Pope is by no means a one-dimensional player, either; he posted some decent rebound numbers (5.9 total boards in 34 minutes per game) and promises to be a serviceable NBA defender at the least. He has work to do in terms of his judgment on both ends, but this is a good pick for Detroit in terms of both pick value and functional fit.